2009 MLB Preview: #4 Chicago Cubs Posted by Anthony Stalter (03/27/2009 @ 4:00 pm) 
Click Here to see Previews of all 30 MLB Teams Offseason Movement: The Cubs were seemingly hosed by the Indians in a trade that sent ultra-utility player Mark DeRosa to Cleveland in exchange for minor league pitching prospects Jeff Stevens, Chris Archer and John Gaub, none of which were viewed as top 10 prospects in the Tribe’s organization. But maybe one of those youngsters will emerge as a quality arm down the road and DeRosa’s contract does expire at the end of the season so at least the Cubs got something for him. Chicago also added volatile outfielder Milton Bradley, reliever Kevin Gregg and pitcher Aaron Heilman, who will move to the bullpen after losing out to Sean Marshall this spring for the Cubs’ fifth spot in the rotation. Top Prospect: Josh Vitters, 3B This club is loaded with quality prospects, including reliever Jeff Samardzija, shortstop Ryan Flaherty and outfielder Tyler Colvin. But Vitters appears to be the best of group, with his excellent plate approach, outstanding hand-eye coordination and natural swing. Thus far in Single-A, Vitters is hitting .357 and slugging .529 in 70 at bats. At only 19, he still has a ways to go before he’ll make his big league debut, but Vitters appears to have quite a future ahead of him. Read the rest of this entry » Posted in: MLB Tags: 2009 MLB Predictions, 2009 MLB Preview, Aaron Heilman, Alfonso Soriano, Angel Guzman, Aramis Ramirez, Bob Howry, Carlos Marmol, Carlos Zambrano, Chad Gaudin, Chris Archer, Geovany Soto, Jeff Samardzija, Jeff Stevens, John Gaub, Josh Vitters, Kerry Wood, Kevin Gregg, Lou Piniella, Luis Vizcaino, Mark DeRosa, Milton Bradley, MLB Preview 2009, NL Central Predictions, Rich Harden, Ryan Dempster, Ryan Flaherty, Tyer Colvin
2009 Fantasy Baseball Preview: Catchers Posted by Anthony Stalter (03/05/2009 @ 7:00 pm) 
All 2009 Fantasy Articles | 2009 Position Rankings There’s an unwritten rule among intelligent fantasy football drafters that goes a little something like this: Don’t draft a quarterback before Round 5. That’s because unless you land Peyton Manning, there’s not a huge difference between the No. 2 rated quarterback and the No. 8. A similar rule can be applied to catchers in fantasy baseball. Chances are if you selected Victor Martinez (the No. 1 rated catcher in most draft rankings in 2008) early in your draft last year, you punched a whole through one of your walls by the All-Star Break. If you selected a guy like Joe Mauer in the fourth or fifth round, you probably were quite satisfied by his .328-9-85-98 production. But what if we told you that you could have had taken Bengie Molina much later and still wound up with .292-16-95-46 production out of your catcher spot? Sure, you would give up runs and sacrifice average, but you almost doubled your home runs and gave your RBI numbers a boost as well. What we’re saying is – don’t overvalue the catcher position. Let someone else jump on Brian McCann’s potential or Russel Martin’s stolen base production while you’re concentrating on bolstering the other positions that don’t have the amount of depth that the backstops do. Read the rest after the jump...Posted in: Fantasy Baseball, MLB Tags: A.J. Pierzynski, Bengie Molina, Brandon Inge, Brian McCann, Chris Iannetta, Chris Snyder, Dioner Navarro, Geovany Soto, Gerald Laird, Jarrod Saltalmacchia, Jason Varietk, Jeff Clement, Jesus Flores, Joe Mauer, Jorge Posada, Kelly Shoppach, Kenji Johjima, Kurt Suzuki, Matt Wieters, Mike Napoli, Ramon Hernandez, Russell Martin, Ryan Doumit, Victor Martinez, Yadier Molina
Geovany Soto, Evan Longoria win Rookie of the Year Awards Posted by Anthony Stalter (11/11/2008 @ 11:00 am) Chicago Cubs’ catcher Geovany Soto and Tampa Bay Rays’ third baseman Evan Longoria won the 2008 NL and AL Rookie of the Year Awards, respectively. Following a season of breakthroughs for the AL champion Rays, Longoria became the first Tampa Bay player to win a national award from the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. The power-hitting third baseman received all 28 first-place votes, becoming the AL’s first unanimous rookie winner since Nomar Garciaparra in 1997.
Soto, the steady catcher who helped the Cubs win the NL Central title, got 31 of 32 first-place votes. The other went to Cincinnati’s Joey Votto. Called up from the minors in April, Longoria batted .272 with 27 homers and 85 RBIs despite missing five weeks after breaking his right wrist Aug. 7. Confident at the plate and splendid on defense, he was a big reason for the Rays’ stunning surge to the World Series after 10 straight losing seasons. Chicago White Sox second baseman Alexei Ramirez was the runner-up after receiving 18 second-place votes. Boston outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury finished third. Soto hit .285 with 23 homers, 35 doubles and 86 RBIs. He became the first catcher to win Rookie of the Year in either league since Mike Piazza of the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1993.
It was amazing to watch Soto play this year because he really became the backbone of the Cubs’ lineup. And without Longoria’s breakthrough season, the Rays never make it to the Fall Classic. It’s nice to finally see a high draft pick like Longoria finally do something. It seems that top 10 picks in baseball fizzle more than top 10 picks in any other sport, which obviously makes sense considering players are sent to the minors and have to work their way up to the big stage, instead of just starting off in the pros right off the bat. |